The deal that created Ben Lerer's new media empire, Group Nine, totaled $585 million

Group Nine Media, the holding
company that tied together four media brands in October -
Thrillist, NowThis, The Dodo, and Seeker - was created in a deal
totaling $585 million,
according to a new SEC filing on Tuesday.

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The filing also
lists $14 million to be "used for payments to any of
the persons required to be named as executive officers, directors
or promoters."

That $585 million includes the
$100 million investment from Discovery Communications, disclosed
at the time. (Seeker,
Discovery's digital network, was one of the Group Nine brands).

The deal reflects the increasing
stakes in the maturing online media market, putting Group Nine in
a class of well-capitalized publishers including The Huffington
Post, Refinery29, Vice, BuzzFeed and Vox. These companies have
secured huge investments from traditional media giants, or been
absorbed by them.

The thinking

According to Group Nine CEO Ben Lerer, the idea behind the
combination was simple: consolidation worked in the TV business,
and it would work again in the digital video market.

"Brands and agencies want fewer points of contact," Lerer
told Business Insider in March. "The idea that you can talk
to one company and just do more is something that really works.
It worked in the TV business."

The ideal outcome for all the Group Nine companies, according to
Lerer, is creating a 360-degree product that spans both the world
of social media and the world of TV. Accomplishing that, he said,
will be much easier with the business sides of the brands merged.

The Lerer family

A big part of the creation of Group Nine came down to Lerer's
family,
he told Business Insider in October. Ben's father Ken, who
cofounded NowThis, has been instrumental in many New York digital
media companies including The Huffington Post, BuzzFeed, and even
Business Insider, where he was an investor and board member until
the sale to Axel Springer. Ben's sister Izzie founded The Dodo.

The family element "made [the deal] possible," Ben Lerer told us
in October. "There was 1,000% transparency … No posturing or
staredowns." There was trust, and a frank discussion of whether
the move would be best for Thrillist, NowThis, and The Dodo.

Now, it turns out, that deal was worth $585 million.

Business Insider parent company Axel Springer is an investor
in Group Nine Media.